Solar

Macquarie solar breakthrough gives Aussie researchers unexpected recycling win

Published by

Microwave technology invented at Australia’s Macquarie University promises to deliver “massive savings of energy” in the manufacture of solar cells, while also making them easier to recycle at the other end of their life cycle.

In a paper published in the US Journal Applied Physics Letters, a Macquarie Uni team led by Dr Binesh Puthen Veettil has shown that microwave radiation works just as well to “anneal” solar cells – a high-temperature process usually performed by cooking them in an oven.

The study has shown that not only is heating the cells using microwave radiation “nearly as efficient” as traditional processes, but it saves considerable time and energy and offers other advantages – including for the sustainability of the cells.

“Because microwave radiation selectively heats silicon, it leads to almost instantaneous effects with massive savings of energy,” the School of Engineering team says.

“This is partly because the rest of the laminated panel of glass, plastic and aluminium is left largely unaffected. And that property that has led to an unexpected recycling benefit for which the group has a patent pending.”

The researchers explain that the unexpected benefit worth patenting is that under microwave treatment, the plastic coat that protects the silicon softens to the point where it can be peeled off mechanically.

This means the silicon plates can be easily delaminated and their components reused without the need for harsh chemicals – and a much stronger economic case can be made against just dumping old panels in landfill.

“Now, as the solar panels which began to be installed in vast numbers about 20-30 years ago are reaching the end of their life and being decommissioned, governments are demanding they be recycled,” Dr Veettil says.

Using current technology, Veettil says this crushing the panels, heating them to about 1400°C and washing them with chemicals to remove the plastic – “a highly energy-demanding process,” he says.

Beyond recycling, the microwave annealing has several other advantages, including being better at the sort of selective and highly tuned annealing required for more modern solar heterojunction technology, where crystalline and amorphous silicon are interleaved.

In these cells, using faster, better directed microwave-based annealing can be highly advantageous, the researchers say.

More precise focus also means that annealing can be directed to specific parts of the solar panel, making it ideal for annealing solar panels with more intricate internal structures made for special purposes.

Veettil also notes that microwave annealing takes is a much cleaner process, with less contamination and able to be undertaken at room temperature.

Meanwhile, a co-author of the annealing paper, Associate Professor Shujuan Huang, is also looking at the potential for microwave annealing in perovskite solar cells.

Dr Veettil’s research in collaboration with the school of photovoltaics at UNSW has been supported with funding from the Australian Centre for Advanced Photovoltaics and from Australian Renewable Energy Agency.

Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of Renew Economy and editor of its sister site, One Step Off The Grid . She is the co-host of the Solar Insiders Podcast. Sophie has been writing about clean energy for more than a decade.

Recent Posts

“Fewer people calling on coal:” Suburban hotspots revealed as home battery rebates top 200,000

Home battery rebates have already topped 200,000, and heading to two million by 2030, with…

17 January 2026

Home battery installations will match the scale of Snowy Hydro scheme – in a single year

Household battery numbers continue to defy all predictions, and they now look set to match…

16 January 2026

“Too valuable to throw out:” Labor announces first national solar panel recycling pilot program

Federal government announces $25 million for a rooftop solar recycling pilot, with up to 100…

16 January 2026

Fortescue begins work on first wind farm, with self-lifting towers and Australia’s biggest turbines

Andrew Forrest's Fortescue starts construction of its first wind farm, featuring unique "self-lifting" tower technology…

16 January 2026

Standalone battery proposed for old gravel pit gets final planning tick despite long distance objectors

A $200 million standalone battery project that attracted no objections from within 50kms of the…

16 January 2026

Australia’s climate hit regions will need fit-for-future science and modelling

It won’t come as much consolation to Victorian communities picking through the burnt rubble from…

16 January 2026